typedef int __bitwise suspend_disk_method_t;
-#define PM_DISK_FIRMWARE ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 1)
-#define PM_DISK_PLATFORM ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 2)
-#define PM_DISK_SHUTDOWN ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 3)
-#define PM_DISK_REBOOT ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 4)
-#define PM_DISK_MAX ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 5)
-
+/* invalid must be 0 so struct pm_ops initialisers can leave it out */
+#define PM_DISK_INVALID ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 0)
+#define PM_DISK_PLATFORM ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 1)
+#define PM_DISK_SHUTDOWN ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 2)
+#define PM_DISK_REBOOT ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 3)
+#define PM_DISK_TEST ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 4)
+#define PM_DISK_TESTPROC ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 5)
+#define PM_DISK_MAX ((__force suspend_disk_method_t) 6)
+
+/**
+ * struct pm_ops - Callbacks for managing platform dependent suspend states.
+ * @valid: Callback to determine whether the given state can be entered.
+ * If %CONFIG_SOFTWARE_SUSPEND is set then %PM_SUSPEND_DISK is
+ * always valid and never passed to this call. If not assigned,
+ * no suspend states are valid.
+ * Valid states are advertised in /sys/power/state but can still
+ * be rejected by prepare or enter if the conditions aren't right.
+ * There is a %pm_valid_only_mem function available that can be assigned
+ * to this if you only implement mem sleep.
+ *
+ * @prepare: Prepare the platform for the given suspend state. Can return a
+ * negative error code if necessary.
+ *
+ * @enter: Enter the given suspend state, must be assigned. Can return a
+ * negative error code if necessary.
+ *
+ * @finish: Called when the system has left the given state and all devices
+ * are resumed. The return value is ignored.
+ *
+ * @pm_disk_mode: The generic code always allows one of the shutdown methods
+ * %PM_DISK_SHUTDOWN, %PM_DISK_REBOOT, %PM_DISK_TEST and
+ * %PM_DISK_TESTPROC. If this variable is set, the mode it is set
+ * to is allowed in addition to those modes and is also made default.
+ * When this mode is sent selected, the @prepare call will be called
+ * before suspending to disk (if present), the @enter call should be
+ * present and will be called after all state has been saved and the
+ * machine is ready to be powered off; the @finish callback is called
+ * after state has been restored. All these calls are called with
+ * %PM_SUSPEND_DISK as the state.
+ */
struct pm_ops {
- suspend_disk_method_t pm_disk_mode;
int (*valid)(suspend_state_t state);
int (*prepare)(suspend_state_t state);
int (*enter)(suspend_state_t state);
int (*finish)(suspend_state_t state);
+ suspend_disk_method_t pm_disk_mode;
};
-extern void pm_set_ops(struct pm_ops *);
+/**
+ * pm_set_ops - set platform dependent power management ops
+ * @pm_ops: The new power management operations to set.
+ */
+extern void pm_set_ops(struct pm_ops *pm_ops);
extern struct pm_ops *pm_ops;
extern int pm_suspend(suspend_state_t state);
+extern int pm_valid_only_mem(suspend_state_t state);
+
+/**
+ * arch_suspend_disable_irqs - disable IRQs for suspend
+ *
+ * Disables IRQs (in the default case). This is a weak symbol in the common
+ * code and thus allows architectures to override it if more needs to be
+ * done. Not called for suspend to disk.
+ */
+extern void arch_suspend_disable_irqs(void);
+
+/**
+ * arch_suspend_enable_irqs - enable IRQs after suspend
+ *
+ * Enables IRQs (in the default case). This is a weak symbol in the common
+ * code and thus allows architectures to override it if more needs to be
+ * done. Not called for suspend to disk.
+ */
+extern void arch_suspend_enable_irqs(void);
/*
* Device power management
} pm_message_t;
/*
- * There are 4 important states driver can be in:
- * ON -- driver is working
- * FREEZE -- stop operations and apply whatever policy is applicable to a
- * suspended driver of that class, freeze queues for block like IDE
- * does, drop packets for ethernet, etc... stop DMA engine too etc...
- * so a consistent image can be saved; but do not power any hardware
- * down.
- * SUSPEND - like FREEZE, but hardware is doing as much powersaving as
- * possible. Roughly pci D3.
- *
- * Unfortunately, current drivers only recognize numeric values 0 (ON) and 3
- * (SUSPEND). We'll need to fix the drivers. So yes, putting 3 to all different
- * defines is intentional, and will go away as soon as drivers are fixed. Also
- * note that typedef is neccessary, we'll probably want to switch to
- * typedef struct pm_message_t { int event; int flags; } pm_message_t
- * or something similar soon.
+ * Several driver power state transitions are externally visible, affecting
+ * the state of pending I/O queues and (for drivers that touch hardware)
+ * interrupts, wakeups, DMA, and other hardware state. There may also be
+ * internal transitions to various low power modes, which are transparent
+ * to the rest of the driver stack (such as a driver that's ON gating off
+ * clocks which are not in active use).
+ *
+ * One transition is triggered by resume(), after a suspend() call; the
+ * message is implicit:
+ *
+ * ON Driver starts working again, responding to hardware events
+ * and software requests. The hardware may have gone through
+ * a power-off reset, or it may have maintained state from the
+ * previous suspend() which the driver will rely on while
+ * resuming. On most platforms, there are no restrictions on
+ * availability of resources like clocks during resume().
+ *
+ * Other transitions are triggered by messages sent using suspend(). All
+ * these transitions quiesce the driver, so that I/O queues are inactive.
+ * That commonly entails turning off IRQs and DMA; there may be rules
+ * about how to quiesce that are specific to the bus or the device's type.
+ * (For example, network drivers mark the link state.) Other details may
+ * differ according to the message:
+ *
+ * SUSPEND Quiesce, enter a low power device state appropriate for
+ * the upcoming system state (such as PCI_D3hot), and enable
+ * wakeup events as appropriate.
+ *
+ * FREEZE Quiesce operations so that a consistent image can be saved;
+ * but do NOT otherwise enter a low power device state, and do
+ * NOT emit system wakeup events.
+ *
+ * PRETHAW Quiesce as if for FREEZE; additionally, prepare for restoring
+ * the system from a snapshot taken after an earlier FREEZE.
+ * Some drivers will need to reset their hardware state instead
+ * of preserving it, to ensure that it's never mistaken for the
+ * state which that earlier snapshot had set up.
+ *
+ * A minimally power-aware driver treats all messages as SUSPEND, fully
+ * reinitializes its device during resume() -- whether or not it was reset
+ * during the suspend/resume cycle -- and can't issue wakeup events.
+ *
+ * More power-aware drivers may also use low power states at runtime as
+ * well as during system sleep states like PM_SUSPEND_STANDBY. They may
+ * be able to use wakeup events to exit from runtime low-power states,
+ * or from system low-power states such as standby or suspend-to-RAM.
*/
#define PM_EVENT_ON 0
#define PM_EVENT_FREEZE 1
#define PM_EVENT_SUSPEND 2
+#define PM_EVENT_PRETHAW 3
#define PMSG_FREEZE ((struct pm_message){ .event = PM_EVENT_FREEZE, })
+#define PMSG_PRETHAW ((struct pm_message){ .event = PM_EVENT_PRETHAW, })
#define PMSG_SUSPEND ((struct pm_message){ .event = PM_EVENT_SUSPEND, })
#define PMSG_ON ((struct pm_message){ .event = PM_EVENT_ON, })
extern suspend_disk_method_t pm_disk_mode;
extern int device_suspend(pm_message_t state);
+extern int device_prepare_suspend(pm_message_t state);
#define device_set_wakeup_enable(dev,val) \
((dev)->power.should_wakeup = !!(val))
__suspend_report_result(__FUNCTION__, fn, ret); \
} while (0)
+/*
+ * Platform hook to activate device wakeup capability, if that's not already
+ * handled by enable_irq_wake() etc.
+ * Returns zero on success, else negative errno
+ */
+extern int (*platform_enable_wakeup)(struct device *dev, int is_on);
+
+static inline int call_platform_enable_wakeup(struct device *dev, int is_on)
+{
+ if (platform_enable_wakeup)
+ return (*platform_enable_wakeup)(dev, is_on);
+ return 0;
+}
+
#else /* !CONFIG_PM */
static inline int device_suspend(pm_message_t state)
#define suspend_report_result(fn, ret) do { } while (0)
+static inline int call_platform_enable_wakeup(struct device *dev, int is_on)
+{
+ return 0;
+}
+
#endif
/* changes to device_may_wakeup take effect on the next pm state change.